Pita ‘has sold iTV shares’

MFP leader may still face disqualification

Pita for PM push: Activists led by P-Move rally in support of Move Forward Party leader Pita Limjaroenrat's bid to become the country's next prime minister. (Photo: Varuth Hirunyatheb)
Pita for PM push: Activists led by P-Move rally in support of Move Forward Party leader Pita Limjaroenrat’s bid to become the country’s next prime minister. (Photo: Varuth Hirunyatheb)

Move Forward Party (MFP) leader Pita Limjaroenrat has reportedly sold the shares he held in a media company in the hope of keeping his bid to become Thailand’s next prime minister alive.

However, as the shares were sold after he had applied to run in the May 14 election, he may still be disqualified for violating the election law.

Political activist Ruangkrai Leekitwattana petitioned the Election Commission to investigate Mr Pita over the shares he held in iTV on May 10. On Monday, he said he would ask the EC to confirm whether or not Mr Pita has actually sold his stake in the company.

“Even if he has sold his shares, it won’t have any bearing on the case, as he held the shares before he applied to run in the 2019 and this year’s election,” he said.

“If he sold the shares after the Move Forward Party nominated him as the party’s prime minister candidate, then the violation had already been committed,” Mr Ruangkrai added, citing Section 98 of the constitution.

The MFP leader is under scrutiny over the 42,000 shares he held in iTV, an independent broadcaster founded in the 1990s. Under the current constitution, a candidate is barred from running for office if he or she owns shares in a media company.

Mr Pita has said the complaint was filed for political reasons.

If found guilty of violating the election law, Mr Pita will be disqualified as an MP, which would complicate the MFP’s efforts to form the next government.

According to Mr Pita, the shares were originally held by his father, who died in 2006.

As his late father’s estate manager, Mr Pita said he tried to sell the shares but could not find a buyer. He had previously said that he had explained the matter to the EC before he was sworn in after the 2019 election.

iTV stopped broadcasting in 2007 and its licence was taken over by Thai PBS. The company was delisted from the Stock Exchange of Thailand in 2014.

However, its business registration remains active because it is embroiled in a dispute with the government over unpaid concession fees.

Senator Somchai Swangkarn echoed Mr Ruangkrai’s view, saying Mr Pita may have been ineligible to run in the election.

Registrations for list-MP candidates were held on April 4-7, while Mr Pita supposedly sold his shares in May, Mr Somchai noted.

The Election Commission is now duty-bound to forward the case to the Constitutional Court for a ruling, Mr Somchai said, adding that the court’s ruling is final and binding.

On Sunday, Mr Pita said that he was ready to explain the matter to the EC, though the poll agency has yet to contact him. He said nothing would obstruct his party’s bid to form a government.

MFP secretary-general Chaithawat Tulathon said on Monday that the party’s legal team is prepared to fight the allegations over Mr Pita’s qualifications.

He insisted that Mr Pita did not violate any of the prohibitions stipulated by the constitution, as claimed by Mr Ruangkrai.

Meanwhile, the MFP on Monday expressed concern that the disqualification of MPs-elect found guilty of election law violations could undermine Mr Pita’s bid to be the next prime minister.

Mr Chaithawat said that while he did not think the party’s MPs-elect would be among those who would be disqualified, he admitted that problems could arise if those disqualified are from parties which are part of the MFP-led coalition.

According to the EC, complaints have been filed against more than 20 MPs-elect.

The MFP finished first in last month’s poll with 151 seats, 10 more than Pheu Thai. The two parties and six others have formed a 313-member coalition that hopes to be the next government.

Separately, EC chairman Ittiporn Boonpracong said on Saturday that he was confident that 95% of the votes would be endorsed well ahead of the 60-day deadline for endorsement, which falls in mid-July.

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Highway 12 expansion completed

The final phase of the expansion of Highway 12 — which links Thailand with Myanmar and Laos in Tak and Mukdahan, respectively — has been completed, which the government hopes will boost cross-border economic activities between the three countries.

Government spokesman Anucha Burapachaisri said on Monday that Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha was hopeful that the highway’s expansion will bring about economic benefits, especially to those living in Kalasin and Mukdahan in the Northeast.

Highway 12 is a part of the East-West Economic Corridor (EWEC), a route which links four mainland Southeast Asian countries, from Myanmar in the West to Vietnam in the East.

The highway’s completion will be a boon for logistics, as well as trade and tourism, as it effectively connects the Andaman coast to the South China Sea, the government said.

About 793 kilometres of the 1,530-km-long highway lies in Thailand. The Thai section of the highway begins at the Second Thai-Myanmar Friendship Bridge in Tak’s Mae Sot district, linking it with Sukhothai, Phitsanulok, Phetchabun, Chaiyaphum, Khon Kaen, Kalasin and Mukdahan, where it connects to Laos at the province’s Thai-Lao Friendship Bridge.

The section that had just been upgraded is the 115.6-km one between Kalasin and Mukdahan, which is now a four-lane highway. The project cost the government 5.8 billion baht.

Mr Anucha said that Highway 12 is expected to boost regional tourism as well as improve the quality of life of those living along the border.

The Finance Ministry has said that the East-West Economic Corridor will boost transborder trade by at least 50%.

According to a report from the Office of the National Economic and Social Development Council, the highway will also benefit the special economic zones (SEZs) in Mukdahan.

There are 868 new businesses in the province’s SEZs with a value of 1.6 billion baht, Mr Anucha said.

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Male employees to receive 15 days of paternity leave

The government has broadened paternity leave periods to cover male government employees, allowing them to have 15 days’ paid leave after their child’s birth.

The leave extension was part of a new Government Employees Executive Committee’s announcement regarding government employee benefits that was signed on Monday, Deputy Prime Minister Wissanu Krea-ngam said.

The paternity leave regulation was added to the section regarding maternity leave in the older version of the announcement issued in 2011. The previous version limited the right to only government officials, a 98-day maternity leave and a 15-day paternity leave with full pay for both males and females. Female government employees already have 90 days of maternity leave.

Mr Wissanu said the updated regulation would give equal rights to government employees employed by government agencies but who do not have fringe benefits like government officials.

Government employees work like government officials, but they do not have to pass a national government test, and they don’t get a pension after retiring. The government introduced government employees (some of whom are on limited contracts) to cut costs.

According to the announcement, male employees wanting to take the 15-day paternity leave must notify their supervisor within 30 days after the delivery day.

Supervisors have full authority to require evidence from the employees.

Those who want to take leave after a child is more than 30 days old can take leave without pay for 15 days unless their supervisors approve the leave with full pay.

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Yellow Line begins trial run

Close to 80,000 passengers rode on the Yellow Line at the start of its trial run at the weekend as the Department of Rail Transport eyes extending the trial to all 23 stations around the middle of this month.

Pichet Kunadhamraks, the DRT’s director-general, said the monorail service has currently opened 13 stations from Hua Mak to Samrong during the trial run.

Mr Pichet said many people turned up for the trial run, with 38,521 passengers on Saturday and 36,879 passengers on Sunday.

Yellow Line trains run every 10 minutes, with operating hours from 9am to 8pm daily. Rides are free of charge, with passengers acquiring free tickets at the booth of every station.

Mr Pichet said the trial run went smoothly, and no issues were reported.

“After one week of the trial run, we will consider opening all 23 stations from Lat Phrao in Bangkok to Samrong in Samut Prakan,” he added.

The 30.4km-long Yellow Line is interlinked with the Green Line at Samrong Station, the Airport Rail Link at Hua Mak Station and the Blue Line at Lat Phrao Station, Mr Pichet said.

Soon the Yellow Line will also be connected to the Orange Line via Yaek Lam Sali station.

He said the number of passengers joining the trial run would increase on weekdays because of the Yellow Line’s interchanges with other city trains such as MRT, BTS and Airport Rail Link.

The Yellow Line is expected to help ease congestion on Srinakarin Road and Lat Phrao Road, as many commuters will use the monorail service instead of their cars, Mr Pichet said.

The Yellow Line is expected to begin commercial operations next month, with fares ranging from 15 to 45 baht.

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King sends sympathies to India

His Majesty King Maha Vajiralongkorn Phra Vajiraklaochaoyuhua has sent a message of condolence to Indian President Droupadi Murmu about the recent rail tragedy that killed over 270 people on Friday.

“Queen Suthida and I are shocked and deeply saddened by the catastrophic collision of trains in Balasore, State of Odisha, claiming untold hundreds of fatalities with the number of injured nearing a thousand,” the message said.

“Our thoughts and prayers are with the victims and their families,” the King said.

“We wish to convey, on behalf of the people of Thailand, our sincere condolences and sympathy to Your Excellency, to the people of India and especially, through you, to all those suffering bereavements and painful ordeals from this tragic disaster.”

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Easier entry for Malaysians urged

Travel chiefs want to tap into tour buses

PHATTHALUNG: The tourism association in 14 southern provinces is calling on the Transport Ministry to ease its regulations to allow tour buses from Malaysia to travel beyond the border province of Songkhla to other southern provinces.

The easing of the regulation would enable authorities to stimulate the region’s economy through promotional campaigns, according to those involved in a recent forum on tourism organised by the National Economic and Social Development Council (NESDC).

Jarun Kaewjeesub, president of the Phatthalung Tourism Association, said participants had agreed that they needed more Malaysian tourists to visit the southern border area. More relaxed entrance rules to allow Malaysian visitors entering Songkhla to travel deeper into other southern provinces would help spread the visitors out to other areas.

The forum also decided to draft a request to be submitted to the director-general of the Department of Land Transport, asking that Malaysian visitors be allowed to visit all 14 southern provinces by tour bus.

Finally, the forum noted that the restriction covered tourists from Singapore and Indonesia too.

Hatyai Songkhla Hotels Association president Sitthiphong Sitthiphatprapha said that at least two million tourists are expected to visit Songkhla using land transport this year, which is higher than the 800,000–900,000 last year.

In April, Songchai Mungprasithichai, president of the Songkhla Tourism Promotion Association, said Hat Yai district, the commercial heart of the lower southern region in Songkhla, was the top destination for Malaysian tourists who want food-related experiences.

Most of them enter via the Sadao immigration checkpoint and likely choose Hat Yai as their weekend destination on a regular basis. The majority, or around 70%, were tour groups, he added.

Mr Songchai said the average occupancy rate should reach 70-80% during Malaysia’s school holidays.

However, the province has realised it has been overly dependent on Malaysian tourists, and it would attract relatively less demand from local visitors due to high domestic travel costs.

Mr Songchai said the new government and local administrator should help to tackle high airfares and create tourist attractions in the city.

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Man blasts ONCB for selling car after probe

A Lao man is petitioning the Justice Ministry against the Office of the Narcotics Control Board (ONCB) for selling his car, which the agency had impounded as part of prosecution efforts against him on a drug offence, even though the court eventually dropped the charge.

Mai Wongwiangkham, 55, sought legal help from lawyer Ratchaphol Sirisakhon after the drug charge against him was dropped by the Criminal Court.

The ONCB charged Mr Mai, a Lao tour guide, with possessing 14kg of heroin that he was accused of bringing into the kingdom while driving to Nong Khai to pick up Thai tourists bound for Laos in 2016.

Mr Mai, who protested his innocence, was detained at Klongprem Central Prison for three years until the Criminal Court dropped the charge against him, a decision also upheld by the Appeal Court.

The court also ordered that the ONCB return his Chery sedan, valued at about 350,000 baht, which the agency impounded during the investigation. Mr Mai said he owned the car outright.

However, after his release from prison, he was told the agency had sold his car for 20,000 baht.

Outraged, Mr Mai said the sale was unbelievable. He insisted the ONCB had no right to put his car up for sale when the court had cleared him of the legal charge. He did not accept the 20,000 baht and turned to Mr Ratchaphol for legal assistance.

“I’ve done nothing wrong. It makes no sense that I should lose anything that belongs to me, and no one is taking any responsibility for what happened to me,” he said. “It’s plainly unfair.”

Mr Ratchaphol said he would take Mr Mai to the Justice Ministry today to petition against the car sale order. The issue, he added, has caused his client distress and tarnished the country’s image.

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Cases surge  by 4% from  last week

DDC urges people to get booster shots

Covid-19 caseloads have increased by 4% from last week, reaching a daily average of 440 cases, according to the Department of Disease Control (DDC).

The DDC also urged people to get a booster shot, especially children who have not been vaccinated.

The number of Covid-19 inpatients rose last week while health authorities encouraged vaccination for young children.

Dr Tares Krassanairawiwong, the DDC director-general, said that from May 28 to June 3, there were 3,085 Covid-19 inpatients, up 4% from the previous week.

On average, there were about 440 Covid-19 inpatients a day last week, up from 424 a day in the previous week.

However, the number of inpatients with lung inflammation dropped to 386 last week from 425 the previous week. Among them, 243 were hooked on life support a day last week, down from 253 daily in the week before.

Meanwhile, Covid-19 fatalities have risen. Last week there were 68 new fatalities, up by 62% from 42 in the previous week.

Dr Tares said that elderly people, those with underlying diseases and pregnant women formed 97% of the new deaths, and they were under-vaccinated against Covid-19.

He encouraged people to receive annual vaccinations to prevent serious illness, hospitalisation and death from the virus. He said this year, children aged less than one had the highest rate of Covid-19, followed by those aged 70 years old and over.

Dr Tares recommended parents promptly bring young children for Covid-19 vaccination. He said there were fewer undesirable symptoms among the young than among older children, and the Covid-19 vaccine has proven internationally to be very safe for recipients.

There may be a fever in most Covid-19 sufferers for a few days, although no severe or dangerous symptoms were detected in young vaccine recipients.

It is advisable that children get a Covid-19 vaccine and basic immunisation against other diseases, he said.

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Cops nab 6 over bogus foreign tours

SURAT THANI: The Provincial Police have arrested six people from a travel agency for fraud after they allegedly sold bogus overseas package tours to at least 99 people, causing damage worth 27 million baht.

Tourist Police Bureau Division 3 commander, Pol Maj Gen Krit Warit, said Sumontri Sonnong, Phanuda Thepchum, Kobsak Pensawat, and Wongchan Pensawat, along with two unidentified staff members, were all arrested on June 4.

They were later charged with fraud and inputting fake data into a computer system. They denied the charges.

Surat Thani Provincial Police chief, Pol Maj Gen Saranyu Chamnanrat, said the suspects legally registered their travel agency in 2022 to provide tour packages; however, they sold fake package tours.

He said the company advertised very cheap package tours to many popular overseas destinations, such as Japan, the Netherlands, and five Central European countries: Austria, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Germany, and Hungary.

These packages were sold on their Facebook page and were much cheaper than the packages being offered by other tour agents, the provincial police chief said.

The agency claimed it could offer low prices because it was sponsored by the Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT), which was a lie, he added.

Victims purchased tours and later learnt that they were cheated on the day of departure.

The suspects are all aged between 40-60 years old and are natives of Phun Phin, Ban Ta Khun and Kanchanadit districts.

According to Pol Maj Gen Saranyu, at least 99 victims have filed complaints with the Surat Thani Provincial Police Division or at the Kanchanadit Police Station, claiming damages totalling about 25.8 million baht.

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Bangkok Pride organisers apologise for damage to student artworks

People pack the ground floor of the Bangkok Art and Culture Centre in Pathumwan district on Sunday. Bangkok Pride 2023 parades started from Pathumwan intersection. (Photo from the Facebook page of Yupapan Saewong)
People pack the ground floor of the Bangkok Art and Culture Centre in Pathumwan district on Sunday. Bangkok Pride 2023 parades started from Pathumwan intersection. (Photo from the Facebook page of Yupapan Saewong)

Organisers and City Hall on Monday apologised for the damage to students’ graduation-related artworks on Sunday when participants in the Bangkok Pride event entered the Bangkok Art and Culture Centre and failed to protect the exhibited pieces despite resquests.

The apology came from Bangkok deputy governor Sanon Wangsrangboon and Naruemit Pride Co in response to the damage to thesis-project exhibits of fourth-year decorative arts students from Silpakorn University due to Bangkok Pride participants preparing their parades inside the arts centre on Saturday.

Mr Sanon wrote on Facebook that he was sorry for the damage and the failure to protect students’ works at the arts centre. He wrote that the incident gave an important lesson for the organisation of future events.

The Bangkok Art and Culture Centre is under the supervision of the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration.

The Bangkok deputy governor wrote that students had carefully created their works for a year before the exhibition.

Bangkok Pride 2023 organisers from Naruemit Pride Co wrote that they apologised for the damage and were willing to take responsibility.

They also said they would consider students’ opinions to find long-term solutions.

The parties responded to a Facebook-based complaint that Bangkok Pride 2023 participants who entered the ground floor of the art centre and prepared their parades there did not heed student exhibitors’ requests not to touch exhibits or place their objects on exhibit stands.

The actions caused irreparable damage to thesis ornamental design exhibits which included blown glass ones.

Students concerned tried in vain to save their work and the management of the Bangkok Art and Culture Centre failed to protect exhibits although exhibitors who paid to show their works there asked the Pride visitors to spare them, according to the complaint.

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